Seinfeld and Kramer on The Creative Process

My wife and I were watching Jerry Seinfeld’s new webisode series “Comedians in Cars Drinking Coffee.”

You should probalby stop reading this post right now and go watch it.

Go ahead.

(pause)

OK, fun right?

In this episode, Michael Richards (Kramer) and Jerry talk about the creative process of making “Seinfeld”. I transcribed this rich dialog from the video. Continue reading “Seinfeld and Kramer on The Creative Process”

Nothing But Joy: Video Happiness

My amazingly talented, beautiful, brilliant, hilarious, industrious (I could go on) wife Sarah made this short video about a fun hidden camera moment she captured a few months ago.

The first half-minute includes a few clips of us just enjoying life–the latter half of the video is where the magic happens.

And yes, I didn’t know the camera was even there.

know you’ll like it. Continue reading “Nothing But Joy: Video Happiness”

Your Biggest (non-creative) Mistake

We all love mistakes.

Right? Well, maybe we don’t love them, but I certainly do.

Mistakes are sometimes costly and often embarrassing. Which is why I love them.

love mistakes. I’ll proudly say that I’ve been known to watch the blooper reel of DVD’s before even watching the movie. Mistakes bring joy.

love mistakes. I bragged about some of my recent ones in this post. Mistakes humanize us.

love mistakes. Mistakes are a pathway to growth.

But there’s one mistake none of us can afford to make.

It has nothing to do with money and nothing to do with humiliation.

So what is it?

Continue reading “Your Biggest (non-creative) Mistake”

The Elusive Idea

I had a brilliant idea for a blog post. For this blog post actually. It was an idea that had a nice edge to it, an engaging hook in it and a wonderful overall feel.

  • This post could’ve turned into a novel.
  • It’s appeal would’ve been worldwide.
  • It’s potential would translate well onto the silver screen.

Only trouble is… I can’t remember the elusive idea.

The Idea Environment

Ideation, the process of forming ideas, happens when we create an environment for idea generation.

So what is an environment for ideation to naturally happen? Think about your last energizing idea. It probably happened when you were doing something like…

-Taking a shower.

-Washing the dishes.

-Driving your car.

-Doing gardening work.

-Taking a walk or working out.

Why do ideas seem to come to us during those times? It’s simple: because we aren’t looking for them. Continue reading “The Elusive Idea”

People Need Your Creativity

Someone needs what only you can create…

[box options]Need a creativity boost? I’ll be joining four other speakers at Creativity CON 2012 in Lancaster, PA October 20, 2012. I’m so excited to talk about the three stage process of creativity and sustainability in my “Create, Sustain, Grow” chat! Click here for conference details to get early-bird pricing before October.[/box]

The Best: Creativity from Carbon

I like the best.

The best food.

The best technology.

The best movie, book, play…you name it.

But isn’t ‘the best’ subjective? Sometimes I have to slow myself down and ask why do I believe this is the best?

  • Who determined that gold is more valuable than silver?
  • When was it decided that if I pay more for something it’s therefore better?
  • Why do I think “the best” is “the best”?

The concusion I came to…

Continue reading “The Best: Creativity from Carbon”

When Saying Yes to Others, Means Saying No to Yourself

[box options]Today’s post is a guest post by Amber Kane. Amber holds a Masters of Arts from Union Institute and University of Vermont, crafts amazing scarves/necklaces and writes about it all on her blog. Enjoy![/box]

You’re creative, which means that you might have trouble saying yes and saying no at the right time. 

  • If you are a maker, you are asked to donate your work to silent auction after silent auction.
  • If you are creative you are the go to poster maker, photographer, party planner, home decorator and fixer of all things that require glue.
  • If you are an artist you are the gift maker, dance decorator and problem solver of all things creative

I’m not here to say that helping a friend out is a bad thing, or that you shouldn’t donate your work to a charity that you believe in, but most creative people find themselves saying yes so often to the small things that they don’t feed their own creative journey.

Then they lose their way. Continue reading “When Saying Yes to Others, Means Saying No to Yourself”

Revealing Your Creativity: Cut, Discard, Reject

The sculptor starts with a mountain of stone. He chisels away and discards much of the rock to reveal the statue within the stone. He must cut and abandon parts of the stone first.

The editor starts with a manuscript. She slashes words from the novel to focus the reader on the essentials of the story. She must release words to make other words more potent.

The clothing designer starts with multiple yards of fabric. He reduces the fabric to smaller shapes and patterns to uncover clothing worthy of a runway. He must reject parts of the fabric to create stunning and original design.

nishat nguyen via Compfight

Creativity is revealed.

Art is found within the medium.

Ideas are released during the process. Continue reading “Revealing Your Creativity: Cut, Discard, Reject”

Two Limiting Beliefs Killing Your Creativity

As artists, we may have limiting beliefs that sabotage our success.

The challenge: we don’t always know we’ve adopted limiting beliefs unless we allow ourselves to be influenced by a creative community.

Limiting Belief One: Perfection

Have you ever said:

  • “Someone else always does it better.”
  • “I tried before and it wasn’t right.”
  • “I can’t.”

Perfectionists don’t often believe they’re perfectionists.

The belief that we (or our work) must be perfect always holds our creativity captive. Continue reading “Two Limiting Beliefs Killing Your Creativity”